Time for NFL to change culture

TIM DAHLBERG

Published 10:32 pm, Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Even by NFL standards, the bash Aldon Smith threw last year at his mountain home in California was a wild one.

By the time the party ended, two people had been shot and the San Francisco 49ers linebacker had been stabbed. Prosecutors would later bring assault weapons charges against Smith, who also faces DUI charges after being arrested in September in a separate incident.

No one was shot in the locker room of the Miami Dolphins, though there were threats of murder and mayhem that weren't actually carried out. The way Richie Incognito talked was so frightening to teammate Jonathan Martin that he quit his job and left town on the first plane he could find.

That the NFL can be a violent place is no secret. The league has prospered greatly by glorifying it between the lines on Sunday, even as evidence mounts that players risk long-term damage to their health and their brains every time they take the field.

It's a tough place to make a living because only the tough survive to play. Martin was tough enough to be trusted to open holes and block 300-pounders intent on doing damage to his quarterback, but apparently not tough enough to handle the abuse that Incognito threw his way.

Listen to Incognito defend himself and you have to wonder what world he lives in. In a society where the types of things he says are not tolerated, how can there be a place where they are encouraged?

"All this stuff coming out, it speaks to the culture of our locker room, it speaks to the culture of our closeness, it speaks to the culture of our brotherhood," Incognito said in a weekend interview with Fox Sports.

OK, we get it. They live in a world where the rules of normal society don't always apply. They're warriors on a mission for greatness, something that those who don't play the game simply don't understand.

It's utter nonsense, of course. The locker room mentality of having your teammate's back is all well and good, but just how that translates into racial slurs or texts about killing family members is incomprehensible. Certainly, athletes in other sports don't take it to those levels.

If that's the culture — and in Miami it certainly seems to have been — then it's time to change that culture. Bullying and racism need to be tackled with the same enthusiasm the NFL is showing for concussion research.

There's a difference between a tight locker room and a place where players act like animals just released from their cages. The rules of normal civilization should apply, even in an abnormal world where young men who have been idolized all their lives for what they can do with a football think they don't.

"The world has changed," Dolphins owner Stephen Ross said. "One thing that will not change: there will not be any racial slurs or harassing or bullying in that locker room and outside the locker room."

That's the kind of talk that should be coming from NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, who has been strangely silent on the scandal.

But for a commissioner who has talked about changing the culture of the league both with concussions and Bountygate, this might be the best opportunity to change one more culture that has no place in any league.

Stop the rookie hazings, and do away with the $15,000 dinner bills. Ban the N-word for good, no matter the color of the skin of the player who might use it.